An analysis of the climate of Macaronesia, 1865-2012

New monthly, long-running, continuous surface air temperature records for four island chains throughout the Macaronesian biogeographical zone in the North Atlantic Ocean are presented. The records run from 1865 for the Azores and Madeira, 1885 for the Canary Islands and 1895 for Cape Verde. Recent (...

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Published in:International Journal of Climatology
Main Authors: Cropper, T. E., Hanna, Edward
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.lincoln.ac.uk/id/eprint/25985/
https://eprints.lincoln.ac.uk/id/eprint/25985/1/__network.uni_staff_S2_jpartridge_Downloads_Cropper_et_al-2014-International_Journal_of_Climatology.pdf
https://doi.org/10.1002/joc.3710
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spelling ftulincoln:oai:eprints.lincoln.ac.uk:25985 2023-05-15T16:52:15+02:00 An analysis of the climate of Macaronesia, 1865-2012 Cropper, T. E. Hanna, Edward 2014-03-15 application/pdf https://eprints.lincoln.ac.uk/id/eprint/25985/ https://eprints.lincoln.ac.uk/id/eprint/25985/1/__network.uni_staff_S2_jpartridge_Downloads_Cropper_et_al-2014-International_Journal_of_Climatology.pdf https://doi.org/10.1002/joc.3710 en eng Wiley https://eprints.lincoln.ac.uk/id/eprint/25985/1/__network.uni_staff_S2_jpartridge_Downloads_Cropper_et_al-2014-International_Journal_of_Climatology.pdf Cropper, T. E. and Hanna, Edward (2014) An analysis of the climate of Macaronesia, 1865-2012. International Journal of Climatology, 34 (3). pp. 604-622. ISSN 0899-8418 doi:10.1002/joc.3710 cc_by CC-BY F331 Atmospheric Physics Article PeerReviewed 2014 ftulincoln https://doi.org/10.1002/joc.3710 2022-03-02T20:07:06Z New monthly, long-running, continuous surface air temperature records for four island chains throughout the Macaronesian biogeographical zone in the North Atlantic Ocean are presented. The records run from 1865 for the Azores and Madeira, 1885 for the Canary Islands and 1895 for Cape Verde. Recent (1981-2010) warming across these islands is significant in summer (JJA) for the Canary Islands, Cape Verde and Madeira, ranging from 0.40 to 0.46°C per decade. Annually, the temperature trends across this period range from 0.30 to 0.38°C per decade across all four island chains (significant for all but the Canary Islands), which exceed the station-based, average global temperature rise by up to 0.10°C per decade. Precipitation records from multiple islands across Macaronesia are also presented in addition to sea-level pressure records from the Azores and Cape Verde. Cape Verde wet season (ASO) precipitation is found to have significantly increased at two of our three sites from 1981 to 2010. The Azores, Canary Islands and Madeira precipitation trends display no significant changes, although the three Azores stations display a recent positive tendency. The extended Azores pressure record allows us to construct an entirely station-based Azores-Iceland North Atlantic Oscillation index (NAOI) from 1865 to 2012 and extend the daily station-based index back to 1944, further than the longest previous daily NAOI by 6 years. In addition, we use the sea-level pressure difference between the Azores and Cape Verde to create a novel method of characterizing trade wind strength across Macaronesia, the Trade Wind index (TWI), which points towards a recent, statistically significant increase (since 1973) throughout the region. Links between the winter and summer NAOI, TWI and Macaronesian temperature and precipitation are explored, as are the differences in warming trends between Macaronesia and analogous subtropical island chains, most of which are found to be warming at slower rates than the Macaronesia stations. © 2013 Royal Meteorological Society. Article in Journal/Newspaper Iceland North Atlantic North Atlantic oscillation University of Lincoln: Lincoln Repository International Journal of Climatology 34 3 604 622
institution Open Polar
collection University of Lincoln: Lincoln Repository
op_collection_id ftulincoln
language English
topic F331 Atmospheric Physics
spellingShingle F331 Atmospheric Physics
Cropper, T. E.
Hanna, Edward
An analysis of the climate of Macaronesia, 1865-2012
topic_facet F331 Atmospheric Physics
description New monthly, long-running, continuous surface air temperature records for four island chains throughout the Macaronesian biogeographical zone in the North Atlantic Ocean are presented. The records run from 1865 for the Azores and Madeira, 1885 for the Canary Islands and 1895 for Cape Verde. Recent (1981-2010) warming across these islands is significant in summer (JJA) for the Canary Islands, Cape Verde and Madeira, ranging from 0.40 to 0.46°C per decade. Annually, the temperature trends across this period range from 0.30 to 0.38°C per decade across all four island chains (significant for all but the Canary Islands), which exceed the station-based, average global temperature rise by up to 0.10°C per decade. Precipitation records from multiple islands across Macaronesia are also presented in addition to sea-level pressure records from the Azores and Cape Verde. Cape Verde wet season (ASO) precipitation is found to have significantly increased at two of our three sites from 1981 to 2010. The Azores, Canary Islands and Madeira precipitation trends display no significant changes, although the three Azores stations display a recent positive tendency. The extended Azores pressure record allows us to construct an entirely station-based Azores-Iceland North Atlantic Oscillation index (NAOI) from 1865 to 2012 and extend the daily station-based index back to 1944, further than the longest previous daily NAOI by 6 years. In addition, we use the sea-level pressure difference between the Azores and Cape Verde to create a novel method of characterizing trade wind strength across Macaronesia, the Trade Wind index (TWI), which points towards a recent, statistically significant increase (since 1973) throughout the region. Links between the winter and summer NAOI, TWI and Macaronesian temperature and precipitation are explored, as are the differences in warming trends between Macaronesia and analogous subtropical island chains, most of which are found to be warming at slower rates than the Macaronesia stations. © 2013 Royal Meteorological Society.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Cropper, T. E.
Hanna, Edward
author_facet Cropper, T. E.
Hanna, Edward
author_sort Cropper, T. E.
title An analysis of the climate of Macaronesia, 1865-2012
title_short An analysis of the climate of Macaronesia, 1865-2012
title_full An analysis of the climate of Macaronesia, 1865-2012
title_fullStr An analysis of the climate of Macaronesia, 1865-2012
title_full_unstemmed An analysis of the climate of Macaronesia, 1865-2012
title_sort analysis of the climate of macaronesia, 1865-2012
publisher Wiley
publishDate 2014
url https://eprints.lincoln.ac.uk/id/eprint/25985/
https://eprints.lincoln.ac.uk/id/eprint/25985/1/__network.uni_staff_S2_jpartridge_Downloads_Cropper_et_al-2014-International_Journal_of_Climatology.pdf
https://doi.org/10.1002/joc.3710
genre Iceland
North Atlantic
North Atlantic oscillation
genre_facet Iceland
North Atlantic
North Atlantic oscillation
op_relation https://eprints.lincoln.ac.uk/id/eprint/25985/1/__network.uni_staff_S2_jpartridge_Downloads_Cropper_et_al-2014-International_Journal_of_Climatology.pdf
Cropper, T. E. and Hanna, Edward (2014) An analysis of the climate of Macaronesia, 1865-2012. International Journal of Climatology, 34 (3). pp. 604-622. ISSN 0899-8418
doi:10.1002/joc.3710
op_rights cc_by
op_rightsnorm CC-BY
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1002/joc.3710
container_title International Journal of Climatology
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container_issue 3
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